Example sentences of "we [vb base] out [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ The fact is , ’ wrote Clark himself on 15 August , ‘ that if we lose out in the Middle East , we shall be immediately destroyed . ’ |
2 | ‘ I do n't suppose we sit out in the sun above twice a year . |
3 | Will my right hon. Friend confirm that on 15 May 1983 he said : ’ We want out of the Common Market ? ’ |
4 | The moment we walk out into the sun to play we all break out into a heavy sweat . |
5 | When we walk out of the forest into the candlelights of the lodge , the forest moves into our spaces like the sea into scoops of sand . |
6 | For the implication of his theory of power is that if we break out of the regime of sexuality then power will play through a new series of discourses . |
7 | We lie out on the stones and talk , |
8 | We clear out of the flat before Teddy and Janice pile in to cook the evening meal . |
9 | It 's the spiel we give out to the tourists if they happen to capture one of us when they 're wandering round the grounds . |
10 | What we loose out in the winter we gain extra in the summer in the summer time . |
11 | We all like to think we stand out from the crowd and , in the past , the face has been seen as the key to unlocking our identity . |
12 | Macadam until we run out of the coastal plain and start to climb . |
13 | Each day we look out for the postman — but so far there 's been nothing . |
14 | When we look out of the window at night what do we see ? |
15 | If we look out at the sky why ca n't we see stars during the day ? |
16 | We look out into the darkness wondering why we elected to go nearly a hundred miles in this . |
17 | I arrived at the Castle early on Monday morning , and after a glass of rum and milk , we set out on the road . |
18 | But , thanks to the kindness of a lady in the petrol depot who agreed to phone our host when a delivery was about to be made and where , we eventually refuelled at about 9.00 am on Thursday we set out on the last leg of our journey . |
19 | We set out for the inlet , pulling a shrieking Maha , surrounded by the usual bevy of children and urged on by the boys , maids and especially the Youngest Son , who was always ready to tease and laugh . |
20 | It was once more about five minutes before we set out for the alleyway behind the Love Me Tender massage parlor . |
21 | So we set out across the open grassy slope that led on up towards the forest . |
22 | The only thing left to do was to get him in to the government hospital seventeen miles away , so we set out across the rice fields and village tracks , with the patient in a bullock cart . |
23 | Following our appointment to [ nature of appointment ] and in confirmation of our recent discussion with … , we set out below the nature of the responsibilities which we undertake in that appointment and our understanding of the further services which you wish us to perform . |
24 | ‘ So we set out from the beginning to be ‘ author-friendly ’ . |
25 | Once again we set out in the pre-dawn walk through the forest , the amble across the alpine pastures , and the short struggle up the screes to the foot of the wall . |
26 | As we set out in the truck which was going to take us the eight miles to Oakington , I was conscious that for once I was really looking my absolute best . |
27 | At nine o'clock that night we set out in the pouring rain , our car packed with people and stores of food , picking our way through lorries , mules and men on foot . |
28 | Although Johnson twice found the hillocky little town lacking — ‘ At night we came to Bamff [ sic ] , where I remember nothing that particularly claimed my attention ’ ; and ‘ Finding nothing to detain us at Bamff , we set out in the morning ’ — he yet managed to write a short exercise in observation of Scottish small borough architecture . |
29 | Say if we do n't get it right at the beginning what we get out at the end can be very successful . |
30 | We get out of the car , stomp round to the wheel , look at it , kick it , swear , look at our watch , feel guilty about not having left enough time to cope with the unexpected , open the boot , bang our head on it , swear again , wonder whether it would n't be better to walk to the phone , decide to change the wheel ourselves , lose one of the nuts and eventually arrive at the meeting half an hour late in a filthy temper , and take up the next five minutes explaining that it must have been a sharp chipping off one of those construction lorries and they overload them to save money and they ought to do something about it … |